Cheese

After over a millennium of development, your rind would be a little wrinkled, too. This pasteurized goat’s milk cylinder—called a “bonde” in the world of French cheesemaking—made its debut in eighth-century France, just south of the Loire in Poitou. Read More

An exuberant goat cheese in three acts: the spicy peppery rind (thanks to a dusting of ash and blue mold) gives way to a tart and runny creamline, leading finally to a dense and lactic core. As sophisticated as it is delicious. Read More

Every time we carefully pull back the edges of the maple leaves that so delicately contain the bright, woodsy cheese bundles from Oregon’s Rivers Edge Chevre, we feel like we’re unwrapping a gift from the tree nymphs themselves. Read More

The most delicious foothill we’ve seen, tucked beneath the shadows of the Rockies in Longmont, Colorado, Haystack Peak bursts with aromas of wet stone and flavors of sautéed mushrooms and cultured butter. Read More

The freshest of the fresh, made weekly only a few hours away by Westfield Farms. Clean, lactic and creamy, this whole-milk goat cheese is naturally the lightest in the case. Lean, mean, and local? Sold! Read More

You may be expecting a cheesecake, but it's really one of the most famous American chevres. Mary Keehn from Humboldt County, CA, makes this tangy treat with a beautiful bloomy rind and a line of vegetable ash bisecting each wheel. 2011 American Cheese Society Winner Read More

And you thought goat cheese was only the fresh white stuff. Check the two-textured magic that a round slice of b-log has to offer; rich and creamy, a bit fresh and citrusy- a little something for everyone. Read More